Parent Post
Complexities can add additional
Complexities can add additional stress, taxing a leader’s conflict capacity.
A key skill for expanding conflict capacity is learning how to self-regulate before engaging in difficult conversations.
When we’re angry, we lose the ability to think critically, and we react emotionally by sending a terse email, shouting, or avoiding altogether.
CommunicationIt’s no longer possible
Communication
It’s no longer possible to rely totally on meetings and gatherings in a physical room. Today’s hybrid leader must acquire good writing and speaking skills as well as competency on various platforms.
Hybrid leaders excel at using digital communications such as email and text, and they adapt to various meeting platforms like Zoom and Microsoft Teams.
It’s through communication that
It’s through communication that we get results.
If there’s too much confusion, excessive unresolved conflict, and lack of follow-through, it could be due to ineffective communication, lack of skills for using various platforms, or using the wrong tools for what the situation requires.
Here are some skills
Here are some skills to practice self-regulation so that you can calm down and get clear before handling difficult situations.
- Feel the emotion, but don’t act until you have calmed down.
- Instead of sending the email, send a calendar invite for a one-on-one meeting.
- Plan your conversation, and clarify your intended result.
- Clarify the situation by stating what’s happening that should not be happening.
- Initiate a one-on-one private conversation in person or by videoconferencing.
Where there’s conflict or
Where there’s conflict or confusion, the first question you should ask is not “Who’s at fault?” but “Where is there a lack of clarity?”
Here’s a checklist of areas that contribute to a lack of clarity:
- Policies that are outdated or unenforced
- Constantly changing priorities
- Ineffective digital communications
- Misunderstanding about how decisions are made
- Unclear job descriptions
Hybrid, remote, and virtual
Hybrid, remote, and virtual environments increase the likelihood of conflict.
But conflict is not the problem, mismanagement is. When leaders mismanage conflict, the environment becomes unstable.
Leaders who are clear, communicate effectively and expand their conflict capacity create stability in complex and dynamic hybrid work environments.
Even in an uncertain
Even in an uncertain work environment, the hybrid leader can provide increased clarity.
Increased clarity leads to focus and focus leads to results.
The wisdom comes in knowing what contributes to a lack of clarity and knowing what kind of clarity is needed in the present moment.
Here are some quick
Here are some quick tips to become a better communicator in a hybrid work environment:
- Text is okay for short updates or requests.
- Keep emails simple and short with the action item as the end.
- Space and format emails for easy reading.
- Difficult conversations require video or in-person meetings.
- Phone trumps email for complex issues.
Leaders can view the
Leaders can view the hybrid workplace as a challenge to overcome or an opportunity to leverage.
Innovative leaders can use this time of instability and uncertainty to define leadership of the future.
Here are 3 ways leaders can create stability in an uncertain and ever-changing work environment.
ClarityHybrid leaders use clarity
Clarity
Hybrid leaders use clarity as their number-one tool for getting results.
Clarity can be as simple as guiding an employee to the next right step, sharing a big vision for the future, or accurately describing a particular situation and desired outcome.
Conflict capacity“Out of sight,
Conflict capacity
“Out of sight, out of mind” is not a good strategy for managing conflict in a hybrid work environment.
The hybrid workplace requires leaders to have the capacity and competency to manage conflict among remote workers, virtual teammates, vendors, partners, and contractors—not to mention any combination of working arrangements.